Bibliography

Scholarly Commentary

Introduction

This is copy one of the Princeton/Troxell collection's unique pair of copies
of the Penkill Proofs, so called because they were completed and sent to DGR
on 18 August 1869, two days after he arrived at Alice Boyd's home Penkill
Castle, in Ayrshire. He stayed at Penkill until 20 September.

These proofs were being set in type in July, as DGR's letters to Jane Morris
of 21 and 30 July 1869 show (see
Bryson and Troxell: 8, 11). The proofs were not finally
printed off, however, until 18 August because DGR was revising and adding
poems continually during the printing process. The Penkill Proofs are the
first integral set of proofs that were prepared for DGR as part of the
printing process that would eventuate in the 1870
Poems. They comprise Lewis's second Proof State (see
The Trial Book Fallacy, 186).

Textual History: Revision

Various poems in the later part of these proofs have been numbered in pencil
by DGR. These numbers correspond to a sequence of pages he projected for the
ordering of the printing of the poems in the next stage of the revision
process, as DGR's note at the beginning of “
The House of Life” in these proofs shows. The companion of this set of the
Penkill Proofs,
Copy 2, has even
more numbering of the same kind, and they strongly suggest that DGR was
discussing the issue of sequence with William Bell Scott. These numbers
permit one to reconstruct the ordering of the poems as they would have
appeared in the
A Proofs, which descend
directly from the Penkill Proofs. (The only perfect copy of the A Proofs
known to exist is in the library of Simon Nowell Smith.)

Printing History

These proofs were being set from texts that DGR supplied to his printers
(Strangeways and Walden) before he left London on 17 August 1869 for a
sojourn at Penkill Castle in Scotland (see Fredeman,
Correspondence, 69.116, 69.125)
.

The printing process stretched between approximately 18 July and 18 August
1869. On 7 August DGR wrote to his publisher Ellis, who was overseeing the
printing process, that the poems should each begin on a separate recto page,
except for the longer poems. These he allowed to be printed on both sides of
the page, though each new poem was to begin on a separate recto. As a
consequence, poems that ran only one page or less all have blank versos. It
has been suggested that this method of printing would allow DGR greater
flexibility in shifting his poems about, as he experimented with the
ordering of the different works. But it is not at all clear that such a
procedure would have any significant impact on the printing process, at
least for the printers who were preparing the works. On the other hand, such
a format may well have facilitated the revision process DGR would be
executing on the proofs.

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